黑料吃瓜群网

Childhood dementia: spotlight on a rare disease


Friday, 26 February, 2021


Childhood dementia: spotlight on a rare disease

Ahead of Rare Diseases Day on Sunday, 28 February, we shine a spotlight on childhood dementia, which affects 2300 children in Australia.

Around the world, 700,000 children and young people are living with childhood dementia. With more than 70 different genetic causes of dementia in children, less than 5% of the disorders have a treatment and most children never reach adulthood.

Associate Professor Kim Hemsley鈥檚 studies into childhood dementia are helping to unlock answers that can assist treatment of these largely unheralded conditions.

Associate Professor Kim Hemsley.

Associate Professor Hemsley leads the Childhood Dementia Research Group within the (FHMRI) at , which is a team of medical researchers whose goal is to identify and test treatments for childhood-onset dementia.

鈥淧eople are surprised and very saddened when I tell them that unfortunately, yes, children get dementia too. It鈥檚 typically something associated with ageing,鈥 Associate Professor Hemsley said.

Due to the limited awareness of childhood dementia, she is using the attention focused on as an opportunity to spread the word and help gain wider public attention for rare disorders and work being undertaken by the Childhood Dementia Research Group.

鈥淩are Diseases Day is an important international campaign that aims to raise awareness of what it means to be rare. There are more than 300 million people worldwide living with a rare disease. Through doing research into more than 6000 rare diseases, the global medical fraternity works towards more equitable access to diagnosis, treatment, care and social opportunity,鈥 Associate Professor Hemsley said.

鈥淭he aim of our work is to develop treatments in the lab and see them move into the clinic so that these children and their families can have a normal life.

The Childhood Dementia Research Group recently published a paper in international journal , highlighting the potential for using widely available retinal imaging techniques to learn more about brain disease and monitor treatment efficacy.

Sanfilippo syndrome 鈥 an untreatable form of childhood-onset dementia 鈥 is one of a group of about 70 inherited conditions that collectively affect one in 2800 children in Australia, making them more common than cystic fibrosis and other better-known diseases.

Associate Professor Hemsley said this research fits neatly into the key message for Rare Disease Day 2021, which is: Rare is many. Rare is strong. Rare is proud.

鈥淲e encourage everyone to take part in this campaign, because awareness leads to empowerment 鈥 and with the whole community supporting action, we will move further down the path to finding crucial medical solutions.鈥

To learn more about childhood dementia, visit .

Top image credit: 漏stock.adobe.com/au/dubova

Related Articles

'Enhanced cleaning' cuts hospital-acquired infections by one-third

Australian researchers who introduced so-called 'enhanced cleaning' measures onto several...

Improving success rates: lactic acid in IVF

The co-author of research published in Biomolecules explains how the metabolism of the...

Hep C point-of-care test helps marginalised populations

A program using diagnostic technologies at the 'point of care' is helping combat...



Content from other channels on our network


  • All content Copyright 漏 2025 黑料吃瓜群网-Farrow Pty Ltd